Elastomers that combined
excellent mechanical performance and healability are essential to
the advancement of stretchable electronics. However, the strength
and toughness of healable elastomers tend to be mutually exclusive.
Herein, a new strategy of the dynamic integrated moiety is developed
to construct covalent and noncovalent cross-linked polyurethane (CNPU)
elastomers. The covalent and noncovalent interactions synergistically
enhance the overall mechanical properties of polyurethane elastomers
such as tensile strength (48.8 MPa), toughness (282.9 MJ·m–3), stretchability (1740%), and healing efficiency
(116%). Finally, elastic conductive wires are fabricated with high
load capacity, stable electrical conductivity under static/dynamic
stretching, and robust healability to demonstrate the potential use
of CNPU elastomers in stretchable electronics.
Although light offers intriguing capability to the control over polymerization, it suffers from the concentration gradient in-duced by the low penetration depth of light, particularly for the low-energy driven systems...
Traditional mechanochemically controlled reversible‐deactivation radical polymerization (RDRP) utilizes ultrasound or ball milling to regenerate activators, which induce side reactions because of the high‐energy and high‐frequency stimuli. Here, we propose a facile approach for tribochemically controlled atom transfer radical polymerization (tribo‐ATRP) that relies on contact‐electro‐catalysis (CEC) between titanium oxide (TiO2) particles and CuBr2/tris(2‐pyridylmethylamine (TPMA), without any high‐energy input. Under the friction induced by stirring, the TiO2 particles are electrified, continuously reducing CuBr2/TPMA into CuBr/TPMA, thereby conversing alkyl halides into active radicals to start ATRP. In addition, the effect of friction on the reaction was elucidated by theoretical simulation. The results indicated that increasing the frequency could reduce the energy barrier for the electron transfer from TiO2 particles to CuBr2/TPMA. In this study, the design of tribo‐ATRP was successfully achieved, enabling CEC (ca. 10 Hz) access to a variety of polymers with predetermined molecular weights, low dispersity, and high chain‐end fidelity.
Traditional mechanochemically controlled reversible‐deactivation radical polymerization (RDRP) utilizes ultrasound or ball milling to regenerate activators, which induce side reactions because of the high‐energy and high‐frequency stimuli. Here, we propose a facile approach for tribochemically controlled atom transfer radical polymerization (tribo‐ATRP) that relies on contact‐electro‐catalysis (CEC) between titanium oxide (TiO2) particles and CuBr2/tris(2‐pyridylmethylamine (TPMA), without any high‐energy input. Under the friction induced by stirring, the TiO2 particles are electrified, continuously reducing CuBr2/TPMA into CuBr/TPMA, thereby conversing alkyl halides into active radicals to start ATRP. In addition, the effect of friction on the reaction was elucidated by theoretical simulation. The results indicated that increasing the frequency could reduce the energy barrier for the electron transfer from TiO2 particles to CuBr2/TPMA. In this study, the design of tribo‐ATRP was successfully achieved, enabling CEC (ca. 10 Hz) access to a variety of polymers with predetermined molecular weights, low dispersity, and high chain‐end fidelity.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.